OK, yields in the sense of produces I assume.
To keep this tight, Rom10 does say the Gospel yields/produces hearing. Rom10 says (you can see this if you use an interlinear or such tool):
BYZ Romans 10:17 Ἄρα (therefore) ἡ πίστις (the faith)
ἐξ (from) ἀκοῆς (noun - [a] thing heard),
ἡ (the) δὲ (and)
ἀκοὴ (noun - [the] thing heard) διὰ (through) ῥήματος (something said, [a] spoken word/statement), θεοῦ. ([of] God)
With a little objective work this can be clear.
The Faith is specifying the faith being discussed - ultimately faith/belief in Jesus Christ
Faith in Jesus Christ is from [a] thing heard - "from" speaks of result (
important for your "yield" wording) - a thing heard is a message (which will be clarified as the verse proceeds)
The thing heard is being specific again to tighten up "[a} thing/message heard" previously stated.
Through [a] spoken word/statement of/from God - the [of] is a basic translational insertion - in this case I see it as speaking of source - God is the source of the spoken word.
So, given all the context and the actual wording:
- The thing heard is God's Gospel
- That little word ἐξ (ek - from) is telling us God's [specific] Gospel results in (yields/produces/) [the specific] faith in Jesus Christ - not hearing
If you want to assert hearing is supernatural, we should look elsewhere. I understand how and why you're saying it's here. But sticking tightly to the Text, it's not clearly here and can be argued against. This Text does not say the Gospel results in/yields/produces hearing.
If we go back to Rom10:14 to pick up the hearing it's important to note not just hearing the Gospel, but also the specific statement re:
hearing of/about Jesus Christ which is in the content of the Gospel. Paul is very simply saying we need to hear
about Jesus Christ to believe in Jesus Christ.
It would be nice to get to complete accuracy to be rid of endless arguments.